Pedro Sanchez also called China's trade imbalance with the European Union "unsustainable" and called on Beijing to open its market to European imports.
per capita, bro. and the “unknown to westerners” phenomena usually pertains to socialism.
any country that uses markets for it’s economy will have bilionaires, and china’s economy is about 35% market based by gdp (iirc, don’t quote me on the exact figure), which makes it proportionally that much unequal. in this case is damned because they did, and it would be damned if they didn’t join global markets. for obvious reasons to me at least.
sometimes people do these western-focused analyses about my own country and completely miss the decisions and events that made it how it is.
which is why i do and would suggest finding more chinese experts to inform it, instead of cherrypicking stuff said by people all the way back in massachussets. china is full of problems and contradictions and it pays to seek understanding of their causes.
they are, however, in no way comparable to the horrors perpetrated by the us. it’s very understandable european leaders would want to do business with them instead of the us given both track records.
Look at the development in the country, bro, inequality in China is on the rise and is reaching US levels, bro, while democracies’ inequality is much lower.
And systems like hukou exclude ~250 million Chinese - roughly a quarter of the adult population - from essential services like health care.
per capita, bro. and the “unknown to westerners” phenomena usually pertains to socialism.
any country that uses markets for it’s economy will have bilionaires, and china’s economy is about 35% market based by gdp (iirc, don’t quote me on the exact figure), which makes it proportionally that much unequal. in this case is damned because they did, and it would be damned if they didn’t join global markets. for obvious reasons to me at least.
sometimes people do these western-focused analyses about my own country and completely miss the decisions and events that made it how it is.
which is why i do and would suggest finding more chinese experts to inform it, instead of cherrypicking stuff said by people all the way back in massachussets. china is full of problems and contradictions and it pays to seek understanding of their causes.
they are, however, in no way comparable to the horrors perpetrated by the us. it’s very understandable european leaders would want to do business with them instead of the us given both track records.
Look at the development in the country, bro, inequality in China is on the rise and is reaching US levels, bro, while democracies’ inequality is much lower.
And systems like hukou exclude ~250 million Chinese - roughly a quarter of the adult population - from essential services like health care.
This has nothing to do with socialism, bro.
you didn’t bother reading anything that i typed out innit. bro.
yes, i’ve seen chinese development, bro. you gotta admit it’s pretty impressive, bro.